Tag Archives: Reality checks

It’s the Business, Stupid

Great line at the end of yesterday’s piece on Obama’s online operation. Chris Hughes, who runs the operation and is a former Facebook guy said the following:

“You can have the best technology in the world,” he said, “but if you don’t have a community who wants to use it and who are excited about it, then it has no purpose.”

This is of interest to me on two counts:

  1. Isn’t it interesting that the business he helped found actually had the community before it had the technology.  In fact, one could argue that the best tech pieces on Facebook are being done by the folks who plug in to their platform and not by the platform itself.
  2. RUN from anyone who walks in to a meeting and says “let’s use/do this because it’s cool”.  You know what’s cool?  Building sustainable businesses.  If the technology helps you get there, I’m in.  If it’s something that costs money, doesn’t generate revenue or revenues in excess of what it costs to do without any measurable ancillary benefits, count me out.

I think this is the point that Mr. Hughes was trying to make.  Use technology as a tool, not as a business.  It’s what makes the business happen.

Leave a comment

Filed under Consulting, Reality checks

Check It Out

Over the course of my career, I’ve been involved in a lot of press releases.  I’ve also spoken with quite a few reporters.  Most of the time, I worked with the internal PR folks at my place of business.  Most of them were very focused on telling the best story while staying on the right side of the truth.  They and I never knowingly gave out false information.  Sure, we put the best face on whatever information we gave out and maybe we didn’t highlight (OK, or even mention) the not so good stuff.  But that’s it.  No lies.  Nothing made up.

Maybe I’m naive, but I’m surprised how often I read something that clearly has come from a press person, or from an executive who generally works with a press person, and something says to me “check it out.”  Like most folks these days, I have a pretty good grasp on what the “search” bar is for and it generally doesn’t take more than a bit of looking to figure out if there is a disconnect with the facts and the story.  Sometimes I even know someone who does know the real story and, frankly, I’m sad when I find out someone I know and/or respect is outright lying.

There are a number of sites that do this in the political world but not that many in business.  In fact, the New York Times was embarrassed not too long ago by their failures to check out information they’d been fed.  Is the amount of information we get every day making us lazy?  Are we expecting to be spoon-fed everything?  Or are we just overwhelmed and the demands on media to publish RIGHT NOW make careful analysis and commentary impossible?

Next time you hear some fantastic numbers or a great business story, do some checking.  Let’s see if someone didn’t let the facts get in the way of their story.

Leave a comment

Filed under Helpful Hints, Reality checks

Carlin

I am old enough to remember when George Carlin was doing the hippy-dippy weatherman routine.  He was funny with a unique point of view.  His language was a lot cleaner but his thinking was always as clear as it was when I saw him perform a couple of months ago.

As we both got older and our hair got longer, I would listen to his albums (right – vinyl!) a LOT in college.  He inspired me to try to do stand-up, which I did at a parents weekend in college.  I don’t remember much about that except a story I told about finding my Mom’s diaphragm and thinking it was a yarmulke that was definitely a Carlin-inspired rant.  I also remember thinking, as I drowned in flop-sweat, that comedy was HARD but Carlin, like all great stars, made it look so easy.

I’m really sad about his passing, but in his words:

I don’t wanna know about sports teams that sew the initials of dead people on their jerseys for one whole season, as if it really means something. Leave that stupid superstitious bullshit in the locker room. I don’t wanna know who’s in mourning. Play ball, you fuckin’ grotesque overdeveloped nitwits!

So we’ll be sad, George, but we’ll keep playin’ ball.

Leave a comment

Filed under Reality checks